So prayed Sin-iddinam, king of Larsa, ruler from 1865 to 1843 BCE, in
a letter-prayer addressed Nin-Isina, "Lady of (the City of) Isin."
She was one of the goddesses of healing,[1]
whose ranks included Bau or Baba, Gula, and Nin-karak.

The alter ego of healing goddesses was the dog (Black and Green 2003:
70). In iconography, such goddesses and dogs go together, and the dog
alone can represent them (Fuhr 1977: 137-138). Why these goddesses were
associated with dogs is unclear. Perhaps the ancients noted that dogs'
licking of their wounds promoted healing. Possibly, as some have suggested,
dog saliva contains medicinal elements. In addition, ancient healers might
have used body parts of dogs in their treatments (Fuhr 1977: 143-144).

A fascinating cylinder seal shows a healing or exorcism ritual. Inside
a reed hut, a patient on a bed is attended by physicians/priests. The
dog on the roof signifies the presence of a healing goddess (Henshaw 1994:
281). During excavations at the goddess's cult city Isin, archaeologists
found bronze plaques scratched with images of dogs, a statue of a kneeling
figure embracing a dog, and a number of small clay dogs, one of which
was inscribed with a prayer to the goddess (Fuhr 1977: 136). Protective
figurines of dogs were often deposited in the foundations of buildings;
one bore the injunction: "Don't stop to think-- Bite!" (Black
and Green 2003: 70).

Bau/Baba
Bau/Baba, whose name sounds onomatopoeic (bow-wow), was principal goddess
of the Lagash area, with its three cities, Girsu, Lagash, and Nimen. As
"Lady of Abundance," Bau/Baba controlled the fertility of animals
and human beings (Leick 1998: 23).[2]
By the time of the famed Lagash governor Gudea (twenty-second
century BCE), who called himself Bau's son (Frankfort 1978: 300), the
goddess had become the daughter of An (Semitic Anu), the head of the pantheon.
In Lagash, she was consort of the warrior Nin-Girsu, "Lord of Girsu";
he had charge of irrigation and the land's fecundity. In other places,
her spouse was Zababa, a northern warrior.

At Girsu, of which she was protector, Bau had a large temple, the E-tar-sirsir
(George 1993: 148 #1085, 157 #1198), also the name of Bau's temple at
Lagash (George 1993: 149 #1086). The "Lamentation over the Destruction
of Ur" recounts that Bau/Baba was forced by outside invaders to leave
her city:

Bau has abandoned Urukug, her sheepfold (has
been delivered) to the wind;
The holy Bagara, her chamber, she has abandoned (Kramer
in Pritchard 1969: 456).

In another lament, "Mother Bau" bemoaned her city and her temple
(Kramer in Pritchard 1969: 614).

Bau's temple and its lands were administered by the wife of the ruler
of the city (Jacobsen 1976: 81). She was identified with Bau, as was her
husband with Nin-Girsu. The Lagash temple, re-built by Gudea (Jacobsen
1976: 156), was served by between one thousand and twelve-hundred people,
and the goddess's estate constituted about six thousand acres of land,
(Frankfort 1978: 222). Among the employees were twelve fishermen for sea-fishing
(Meek in Pritchard 1969: 217). At both temples, kings and ordinary folk
received oracles from the goddess and presented her with many offerings,
mostly votive, to fulfill a vow made for services rendered (Leick 1998:
23).

The four-day Festival of Bau/Baba at Lagash took place in the autumn,
when pilgrims from other towns came bearing offerings. During the Festival,
common folk and royalty made sacrifices to their ancestors, thus feasting
the dead. Afterwards, they dined on the leftovers (Cohen 1993: 53-54,
470-471). Since mediating between angry gods/ demons and their human prey
was a task that often fell to healing goddesses, they needed to have close
connections with the Underworld (Cohen 1993: 149).

At the New Year, there was also a festival of Bau/Baba at Girsu, when
a "Sacred Marriage" rite involving Nin-Girsu and Bau took place
(Cohen 1993: 67, 75). According to Frankfort, Bau was dominant in the
ceremony (1978: 297).

Nin-karak
The end of the Babylonian story of Adapa, likened to Adam for losing humans
their immortality, decreed:

. . . what ill he [Adapa] has brought upon
mankind,
[And] the diseases that he brought upon the bodies of men,
These Ninkarrak [sic] will allay (Speiser in Pritchard 1969: 103).

On the other hand, the famous Law Code of the Hammu-rapi (Hammurabi),
king of Babylon (about 1792-1750 BCE), curses anyone distorting the law
or flouting it:

May Ninkarrak [sic], the
daughter of Anum . . .,
inflict upon him in his body a grievous malady,
an evil disease, a serious injury which never heals,
whose nature no physician knows
which he cannot allay with bandages,
which like a deadly bite cannot be rooted out,
and may he continue to lament (the loss of) his vigor
until his life comes to an end! (Meek in Pritchard 1969: 180).

Undoubtedly the goddess was not only beneficent, but could also inflict
the miseries which, normally, people asked her to allay. Like the other
healing goddesses, Nin-karak had Underworld associations, as her title
demonstrated: Nin-E-ki-siga "Lady of the House of Offerings for the
Dead." This refers to a ritual for honoring the dead, a ritual to
which the goddess might have had a special relationship.

In Mesopotamia, not only did the dead receive proper burial, but they
got regular funerary rituals and food-and-drink offerings. A "caretaker,"
normally a family member, had to ensure that the family fully remembered
the dead not only by feeding them, but by having their names ritually
intoned. Sharing of feasts with the dead reinforced family  ancestors,
living, and descendants formed a long chain of interdependence. Similar
cult practices were found elsewhere in the ancient Eastern Mediterranean.
Indeed, the spectacular remains of a funerary feast were recently unearthed
by German archaeologists working in Syria.[3]

Nin-karak temples are attested for, among other places, Babylon "Pure
Mountain," Borsippa "House which Gives Life," and Sippar
"House of Rejoicing," (George 1993: 102 #488, 150 #1095, 155
#1167). Probably centers of healing, as well as sources of divinations
and oracles, the temples would have been staffed by personnel trained
in healing rituals, dream interpretation, and divination techniques.

Gula
Mesopotamia's goddess of healing par excellence was Gula, patron of physicians,
whose name, actually a title, means "The Great One" (Black and
Green 2003:101). Obviously the epithet displaced the original and now-lost
divine name. She was also known as "Great Mother," "Mother
Gula," and "Lady of Life." She was the daughter of An/Anu.
Her consort, depending on the city, was the storm god Nin-urta, the warrior
Nin-Girsu, or Pabil-sag, Lord of Isin. Her seven children included the
healing god Damu, who was worshipped at Isin, and Nin-azu, god of both
healing and the Underworld. Like other healing deities, Gula also inflicted
disease.

Gula was much invoked in healing rituals and incantations, by which those
who were ill begged her assistance. They also used prayer-letters. Honored
in hymns, she was sometimes invoked in law codes and treaties. At least
one treaty addressed her as the great physician (Reiner in Pritchard 1969:
534). Babylonian king Nabonidus (Nabu-na'id) who reigned 555-539 BCE,
dreamed of the goddess "who restores the health of the dead(ly sick)
and bestows long life." He prayed for "lasting life for [him]self
and that she might turn her face towards [him]." Then she "looked
steadily upon [him] with her shining face (thus) indicating (her) mercy"
(Oppenheim in Pritchard 1969: 310). Gula's worship certainly lasted a
long time, its longevity undoubtedly indicating her efficacy in helping
people.

Her main cult center was Isin, where she was identified with Nin-Isina,
and resided in the great healing temple E-gal-makh "Exalted Palace"
(George 1993: 88 #318). She also had temples in most other cities, with
three at Babylon! Festivals of Gula are attested for a number of places.
At Umma, Gula received an offering of a sheep, and her statue was carried
in a procession. Throughout the land in Assyrian times, celebrations of
Nin-urta's victory over the monster Anzu bird were marked by foot races.
One document identifies a dog running about as "a messenger"
from Gula (Cohen 1993: 333-334).

Both Gula and Nin-urta were protectors of boundaries, and her name and
image appeared often on kudurrus or boundary stones. Seated regally on
a throne, she had her sacred dog beside her.

Nin-Isina
Nin-Isina's city must have been a kind of Mesopotamian Lourdes, a place
of pilgrimage for the sick, maimed, and dying. The temple also provided
midwives (Leick 1998: 133). The precinct of the E-gal-makh must have been
an extremely busy and noisy place, with sufferers seeking treatment, priests
performing rituals and incantations, and dogs barking. Like Lourdes, it
would have been crowded with votive and dedicatory objects. During festivals
in the goddess's honor, her statue would have been carried through the
city to the sounds of music and rejoicing. Nin-Isina's precinct also housed
a sanctuary called "Dog-House," probably a "sacred dog
kennel" (George 1993: 156 #1182). There the goddess's alter ego would
have enjoyed a luxurious life, until, perhaps, it became a sacrifice.
During excavations, many dog burials were unearthed in the cult area (Fuhr
1977: 136),[4]
probably remains of votive and ritual sacrifices. A very important deity,
Nin-Isina was worshiped all over Mesopotamia and had temples or shrines
in most major cities (George 1993: 88 #320-321, 152 #1123).

As goddess of healing, "Great Doctor of the Black Headed (Ones)
[the Sumerians]," Nin-Isina was nearly identical with Gula (Black
and Green 2003: 140). At a later time, she also took over some of Inanna/Ishtar's
warlike traits (Leick 1998: 132): "I, woman and hero, I, the mighty
warrior, I go against ["a rebellious country"]" (quoted
by Jacobsen 1977: 193). She was daughter of the goddess Urash, a name
understood in ancient times to mean "Earth." In some traditions,
Urash was the spouse of the head of the Mesopotamian pantheon, the sky
god An (Black and Green 2003: 182). Pabil-sag, son of En-lil, was Nin-Isina's
consort, and their son was the healing god Damu (Black and Green 2003:
57).

Like Bau, Nin-Isina makes her appearance in Sumerian laments. The "Lamentation
over the Destruction of Sumer and Ur" wailed:

Isin, no longer a `quay-shrine,' was deprived
of water.
[Nin]isinna [sic], the mother of the Land, wept bitter tears,
'[Oh] her [destroyed city] destroyed house,' bitterly she cried (Kramer
in Pritchard 1969: 614).

In another lament, "She who is of Isin" abandoned her city
and "her shrine Egalmah [sic]" (Kramer in Pritchard 1969: 455).

Nin-Isina would certainly be weeping today over her beloved Isin. The
site, south of Baghdad in Iraq, is being subjected to indiscriminate looting.
Taken there by German archaeologist Susanne Osthoff, who was recently
released by hostage-takers, Edmund Andrews of The New York Times
was utterly shocked by the scene: "What we saw was unforgettable."
Several hundred men were digging artifacts out of "dozens of newly
dug holes," most of which were quite wide and deep. Guns were everywhere,
but "the atmosphere was almost festive."

As we stood at the edge of one hole, we watched
a teenager extract a large unbroken urn from the clay and then prance
with it on his head before our cameras. At another hole, I watched a young
man gently dig out part of the statue of a calf.

During about an hour, looters unearthed sculptures, vases, cylinder seals,
and clay tablets bearing cuneiform writing. According to Andrews, many
objects "dated back 3,000 years to the Sumerian era" (Andrews
2005).

Indeed, the Lady of Isin would be weeping, but she would also sympathize
with the desperately poor people "swarming like ants" over her
sacred precinct, even if she could not condone their ravages. Let us hope
that she does not retaliate by releasing the demons of disease that she
controls or loosing her dogs on the looters. Rather might she carry out
the Hammu-rapi [Hammurabi]
curse against the antiquities market, especially the collectors.

Conclusion
Although likely separate deities originally, these goddesses were so regularly
identified with each other as to be hard to tell apart. All were patrons
of "the art of medicine," and the Sumerians appealed to them
for help against demons causing human diseases (Black and Green 2003:
67-68). Still, these goddesses of healing are not mentioned in the oldest
medical document from Mesopotamia, dating to the third millennium BCE
(Kramer 1981: 64).

Notes

There were many: Gula
was identified with no fewer than nine (Fuhr 1977: 136)

A very old deity, she
is attested in documents dating from the period 2900 -2350 BCE.

Hallo, William W. 1976. "The Royal
Correspondence of Larsa: I. A Sumerian Prototype for the Prayer of
Hezekiah," 209-224 in Cuneiform Studies in Honor of Samuel
Noah Kramer, ed. Barry L. Eichler, with Jane W. Heimerdinger and
Åke Sjöberg. (Neukirchen-Vluyn, Germany): Kevalauer/Butzon
and Bercker

Henshaw, Richard A. 1994. Female and
Male. The Cultic Personnel: The Bible and the Rest of the Ancient
Near East. Allison Park, PA: Pickwick Press

Jacobsen, Thorkild 1977. "Mesopotamia,"
123-219 in The Intellectual Adventure of Ancient Man: An Essay
on Speculative Thought in the Ancient Near East, by H. and H.A.
Frankfort, J. A. Wilson, T. Jacobsen, and W.A. Irwin. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press

Kramer, Samuel N. 1981.History Begins
at Sumer: Thirty-Nine Firsts in Recorded History. Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press

Contributors retain the copyright to their work;
please do not take art or words without permission. Other graphics and
reference materials are used and attributed as per the Fair Use Provision
of The Copyright Act and individual terms of use.